I wonder about an ir real time camera things in the night.i am thinking it would be good if i could augment my current wifi cameras on my property with one that patrolled my skies at set intervals.
I have a Canary camera - You don't have to pay for the subscription and can see things from the last 24 hours for free. If you need to save anything or need the 30 days of backup the subscription isn't expensive. The cameras have pretty good IR and the app on my phone works well. You can set it to geofence to track any movement once you leave your property if that's something that interests you.I wonder about an ir real time camera things in the night.
Air Force Chief of Staff Charles Q. Brown, Jr., sits in a LIFT Aircraft Hexa aircraft during a visit to Camp Mabry, Texas, Aug. 20, 2020. (Air National Guard/Staff. Sgt. Sean Kornegay)
26 May 2021
Military.com | By Oriana Pawlyk
A flying ambulance heads to a remote airfield somewhere in the Pacific. With or without a pilot behind the controls, it's able to land vertically, like a helicopter, near a base where troops are under attack. A wounded service member boards and straps into wearable technologies that monitor his condition, and the aircraft takes off to a site where his injuries can be treated.
It's a scenario that Lt. Gen. S. Clinton Hinote, the Air Force's deputy chief of staff for strategy, integration and requirements, envisions for the service's "flying car" effort. That initiative, while in the nascent stages, has the potential to save lives or deliver critical equipment, all while decreasing the service's carbon footprint, he added.
When they said this about the brand new Ospreys I said "cool, I'll believe it when I see it". Then the Ospreys started killing whole platoons of Marines at a time and I told the brass "I dont give a shit, you'll never get me on one of those death traps". And then like 15 years later they said "every" aircraft in the inventory will be able to fly as a drone by 2020 or 2025 or something like that, and all I could think about was "every" included the vertical take-off Osprey... and I said "oh crap, here we go again". I hope they get it right this time. At least this one has a completely different operating system
Air Force Chief of Staff Charles Q. Brown, Jr., sits in a LIFT Aircraft Hexa aircraft during a visit to Camp Mabry, Texas, Aug. 20, 2020. (Air National Guard/Staff. Sgt. Sean Kornegay)
26 May 2021
Military.com | By Oriana Pawlyk
A flying ambulance heads to a remote airfield somewhere in the Pacific. With or without a pilot behind the controls, it's able to land vertically, like a helicopter, near a base where troops are under attack. A wounded service member boards and straps into wearable technologies that monitor his condition, and the aircraft takes off to a site where his injuries can be treated.
It's a scenario that Lt. Gen. S. Clinton Hinote, the Air Force's deputy chief of staff for strategy, integration and requirements, envisions for the service's "flying car" effort. That initiative, while in the nascent stages, has the potential to save lives or deliver critical equipment, all while decreasing the service's carbon footprint, he added.
Yeah... your Sky... at intervals... like a Neti am thinking it would be good if i could augment my current wifi cameras on my property with one that patrolled my skies at set intervals.